Jump to content

###### KC Chiefs won SUPER BOWL….EAGLES VS CHIEFS 2022-23 ########


LadiesTailor

Recommended Posts

2 minutes ago, perugu_vada said:

I don’t watch advertisements game uncle ;) game thakuva ads ekuva

Hehe thappatledhu anna. Balavanthaga chudalsi vathundhi family tho. Yeah even I don't like this chit show but thappatledu anduke ikkada at least sollu veskovachu with diwakarams 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Sucker said:

Dave Prakash vuncle. Kottesinam desis

 

PRAKASH_David_400-1.jpg

Dave was a medical student living in Washington, D.C. when he experienced the attacks of 9/11. As an immigrant from India, the terrorist attacks on his adopted country resonated deeply. He resigned from his medical residency training to commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Air Force. Dave entered pilot training to serve in a combat role and became a bomber pilot.

Dave served in the B-52. His unique perspective as aviator and physician served him well as an operational test pilot. Dave tested new weapons and systems that increased the lethality of the venerable bomber. As a flight surgeon, he never lost sight of the human element as he cared for the same people that served beside him. He fought to improve the human-machine interface in future bomber platforms and initiated a program to modernize B-52 ejection seats that will save lives and reduce life-cycle costs.

As a Tillman Scholar, Prakash attended Stanford’s Graduate School of Business in order to help build a company that will save lives by helping surgeons think more like pilots by applying aviation safety principles and electronic checklists in the operating room. Today, Dave works on artificial intelligence and machine-learning technology in healthcare and on future aerospace systems. In his free time, Dave advises early-stage companies and is a member of the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Renal Disease Council.

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Spartan said:

 

PRAKASH_David_400-1.jpg

Dave was a medical student living in Washington, D.C. when he experienced the attacks of 9/11. As an immigrant from India, the terrorist attacks on his adopted country resonated deeply. He resigned from his medical residency training to commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Air Force. Dave entered pilot training to serve in a combat role and became a bomber pilot.

Dave served in the B-52. His unique perspective as aviator and physician served him well as an operational test pilot. Dave tested new weapons and systems that increased the lethality of the venerable bomber. As a flight surgeon, he never lost sight of the human element as he cared for the same people that served beside him. He fought to improve the human-machine interface in future bomber platforms and initiated a program to modernize B-52 ejection seats that will save lives and reduce life-cycle costs.

As a Tillman Scholar, Prakash attended Stanford’s Graduate School of Business in order to help build a company that will save lives by helping surgeons think more like pilots by applying aviation safety principles and electronic checklists in the operating room. Today, Dave works on artificial intelligence and machine-learning technology in healthcare and on future aerospace systems. In his free time, Dave advises early-stage companies and is a member of the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Renal Disease Council.

 

Kottesinam pakka ga 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Spartan said:

 

PRAKASH_David_400-1.jpg

Dave was a medical student living in Washington, D.C. when he experienced the attacks of 9/11. As an immigrant from India, the terrorist attacks on his adopted country resonated deeply. He resigned from his medical residency training to commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Air Force. Dave entered pilot training to serve in a combat role and became a bomber pilot.

Dave served in the B-52. His unique perspective as aviator and physician served him well as an operational test pilot. Dave tested new weapons and systems that increased the lethality of the venerable bomber. As a flight surgeon, he never lost sight of the human element as he cared for the same people that served beside him. He fought to improve the human-machine interface in future bomber platforms and initiated a program to modernize B-52 ejection seats that will save lives and reduce life-cycle costs.

As a Tillman Scholar, Prakash attended Stanford’s Graduate School of Business in order to help build a company that will save lives by helping surgeons think more like pilots by applying aviation safety principles and electronic checklists in the operating room. Today, Dave works on artificial intelligence and machine-learning technology in healthcare and on future aerospace systems. In his free time, Dave advises early-stage companies and is a member of the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Renal Disease Council.

 

@perugu_vada chusi nerchuko vuncle GC raagane mesthri dhukaanam multiple jobs kaadhu ilantivi yemanna cheyyi 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...